TheCommissioner
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personally my concern was closing the gun show loophole, another thing that should be looked at is all 50 states having a uniform permit and ownership standard
personally my concern was closing the gun show loophole, another thing that should be looked at is all 50 states having a uniform permit and ownership standard
The sad part is most of these changes will cost money which means that congress has to approve the money that would pay for the cost whoch means congress can block most of this stuff.![]()
I applaud Obama. This is a fantastic step towards reducing the insanely high amount of gun violence in our country. The one country in the 1st world that is leading in gun violence by MASSIVE numbers.
Just curious here, but what will it cost?
The mental health funding does not fall under the rubric of an executive action, as it would require an appropriation and, therefore, the support of Congress.
And that, in turn, spotlights the limits of the president's refined approach.
Put simply, Congress still has a say, either in rejecting requests for funding, or in proactively taking funds away from federal agencies if the executive actions go forward.
"I have formally notified Attorney General Lynch that I will aggressively protect our Second Amendment rights using Congress' power of the purse, said Rep. John Culberson (R-Texas). "I notified the attorney general that if the Department of Justice attempted to create new restrictions on our constitutional rights that I would use every tool at my disposal to immediately restrict their access to federal funding.
http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/obama-gun-control_568b03bce4b014efe0db7356
The mental health component, the 230 new employees, and the departments funding that is controlled by congress.
And there is the legal battles. The thing about requiring anyone who sells a gun to have a license will be fought tooth and nail in the courts.
Thanks Marvolo, I was not 100% sure what you meant. If they do this right, the cost of running the background checks could help fund the new employees.
A private seller will not need a license to sell a gun, they will just be forced to visit a FFL dealer to make the transaction to sell the other individual. If that person does not pass the background check the firearm cannot be sold to that person (which is no different and follows the same laws and rules as if the FFL Dealer was trying to sell a firearm to that same person, you don't pass you don't get it). All would be done with a signature and a $15 to $30 fee (fees may very but those are the fees around my area). All other forms of gun sellers are already licensed firearms dealers or else they could not sell firearms (was already a current law). There are no other forms of gun sells other than FFL gun dealers which are licensed and private part gun sells. that's it. Other than illegal activity via black market, cartels, etc.
You and I both know that congress isnt going to see it that way or make it seem that simple. Hell, they'll probably even take the bit about sellers having to go to an FFL out to be some unconstitutional thing.
And the $500 million in federal funding for mental health will need approval. And congress can just take enough funding away from some of the departments to ensure they dont have the resources to implement the new stuff effectively.
Congress knows how to kill something deader than dead or at the very least make sure it cant be implememted well then they can turn around and say, "See the presidents actions did nothing to stop the problem. More regulations wont work! Only more guns will work!" Or some other BS.
I want to be optomistic about this, but its hard to be.
the NRA has dumped 30 million into politicians to make sure NOTHING gets done on gun control, hell the CDC cant even research gun violence, and theyve been stalling on the appointment for a new director for the ATF
Everyone has their opinion on the NRA, good, bad, biased, unbiased. I guess it boils down to how you feel about firearms and your political stance. But the fact is a lot of the anti-gun movements and people throw a lot of money and a lot of "facts" or "false facts" however you want to look at it a the firearm debate being anti-gun as the NRA throws at it being pro-gun.
what I stated isn't an opinion
http://www.publicintegrity.org/2013...oney-and-power-still-holds-sway-over-congress
the NRA holds significant sway over many politicians, even to the point where they are paying them to not even comment when mass shootings happen
Everyone has their opinion on the NRA, good, bad, biased, unbiased. I guess it boils down to how you feel about firearms and your political stance. But the fact is a lot of the anti-gun movements and people throw a lot of money and a lot of "facts" or "false facts" however you want to look at it a the firearm debate being anti-gun as the NRA throws at it being pro-gun.
I didn't say what you said was an opinion. I said everyone has an opinion ABOUT the NRA. But as I said, Money and sway over politicians exists both ways. Pro-Gun via NRA and other Pro-Gun advocates as well as Anti-Gun movements and advocates. Its not a one way thing here.
find me any anti gun organization that spent $30 million, hell that even has 30 million to spend on politicians to keep them quiet
and this is coming from someone who was an NRA member from 14 years old, Junior NRA than a proper membership up until I left the military in 2002
They trade on misery and death and I do support the 2nd amendment but I wont be a part of that
Do you really wish harm on those who you disagree with? That just sounds stupid on so many levels.I used to support the NRA. Then Sandy Hook happened. Then the NRA blocked Congress from doing what over 85% of the country wanted. I stopped supporting the NRA and actively started praying for a lunatic with an AK to visit their headquarters.
NRA aside, I don't see how anyone could oppose Obama's executive orders. None of it is terribly unreasonable. It is the opposite. It is incredibly reasonable.
I used to support the NRA. Then Sandy Hook happened. Then the NRA blocked Congress from doing what over 85% of the country wanted. I stopped supporting the NRA and actively started praying for a lunatic with an AK to visit their headquarters.
NRA aside, I don't see how anyone could oppose Obama's executive orders. None of it is terribly unreasonable. It is the opposite. It is incredibly reasonable.
There is one fact...the NRA has continually stopped any progress made on decreasing gun violence in our country. They have made this country a place to be pitied and scoffed at by every other 1st world country who has already dealt with this issue.